Rises The Night (The Gardella Vampire Hunters 2)
She froze, stopping her breath to listen. To feel.
Yes, it was there. It was real, raising the hair on her nape in a warning she hadn’t felt for a twelvemonth: a vampire was near. Below.
Now, with the rush of anticipation fueling her actions, Victoria climbed over the rickety remains of the door frame and started down the steps into the cavernous chamber. She felt along the stones with her left hand while her right carried the lantern, shining onto the wood and stone rubble that littered the steps. If she could have approached without the illumination, she would have done so, but seeing in the dark was not one of the gifts bestowed upon Venators. Some of the element of surprise would be diminished, but that was better than trying to make her way through the mess silently, and in the dark.
Miraculously, the ceiling had not completely caved in over the stairs, and she soon found herself at the bottom. Victoria paused, thrusting the lantern behind her to block some of its light, and peered around the corner into the dark, misshapen cellar.
What was left of Sebastian’s pub.
Although the tingle at the back of her neck still played there, confirming her instinct, she did not feel or hear any sign of movement. She stilled, but for the fingers slipping into the deep pocket of her coat.
The stake felt comfortable in her hand, but she didn’t withdraw it yet. She let her grip close around the wood, warm from her body, and waited, listening and feeling.
The chill on her neck edged colder, and she breathed the proximity of the vampire and the impending exhilaration of battle. Her heart rate picked up speed. Her nostrils flared as if to smell the presence of an undead.
At last, satisfied she was alone in the chamber, Victoria drew the lamp forth. Shining it around, she saw the same scene of destruction that had greeted her months ago. But now her mind was not numbed by fear and apprehension. Now she saw the blackened ceiling beams, the splintered tables and broken glasses…perhaps she even smelled the faint tinge of blood in the air.
The lantern bobbed as she climbed over a fractured chair, and glass crunched like gravel beneath her feet. She was making her way toward the innermost, darkest part of the wall, hidden under a lowering ceiling. The growing sensation at the back of her neck told her she was moving in the right direction.
Sebastian Vioget had disappeared the night the Silver Chalice burned. Max had also been there that night, and he told Victoria he didn’t know whether or not Sebastian had escaped from the fire. She knew he didn’t give a whit what had happened either way.
Victoria knew she shouldn’t care either…but she hadn’t been able to forget the bronze-haired man who welcomed vampires into his establishment. He’d once told Victoria it was better to know them and to offer them a place where they might find ease, where their tongues might loosen and information might be gained…
She found the secret door Sebastian had taken her through the very first night she’d met him. Tucked away under a low stone ceiling and set in among the rough walls, it remained fairly unscathed. Marked with black streaks, it was ajar.
And the cold at her nape tingled more sharply.
Victoria pushed through the door, leaving the lantern at the entrance of the passageway. She felt the weight of the pistol in her pocket as it bumped against the edge of stone—the pistol, useless against a vampire, of course, but helpful for other purposes. In the dark, narrow passageway, Victoria couldn’t help but remember facing Sebastian, with the damp brick behind her, and him much too close for propriety’s sake as he reached to sweep off the hat of her gentleman’s disguise.
He hadn’t kissed her that time.
Moving down the faintly lit hallway, quickly, as though to leave the memories behind her, Victoria made her way to the small room on the left, the one Sebastian had used as an office and sitting room.
He, she, it, or they…were in this room.
Her lips curled in a feral smile, and anticipation kicked up her pulse. She had been waiting for this for months.
The door was ajar, giving her the opportunity to peer around into the room. It was lit from within. Only a large lantern could illuminate the chamber well enough for her to see the intricate brocade design on the sofa from where she stood. Interesting that a vampire or two would use a lantern.
From what she could see through the open door, the room had been untouched by the fire with the exception of a lingering smoke smell that had likely been trapped in the couch and chair upholstery. There was no sign of disturbance…the books were still lining shelves, the pillows perfectly arranged on the furniture…even the silver tray with the brandy and sherry bottles was in place across the room.
The only things out of place were the two figures bent over Sebastian’s desk. At least one was a vampire.
Slipping the stake from her pocket, Victoria let it hang behind the folds of her jacket and stepped into the room.
/> “Good evening, gentlemen,” she said casually. “Are you looking for something?”
Her year of grief had made her a bit slow.
One of them was at her before she expected it, his eyes bloodred and his incisors flashing. Victoria stepped back, felt the wall behind her, and twisted away. He followed, and she tripped over the leg of a chair, nearly stumbling to the floor. The error made her more determined, and the skills Kritanu taught her came flooding back to her muscles like the fit of a well-worn glove.
By the time Victoria gained her balance, the vampire was reaching for her, inadvertently opening his chest to her driving stake. She slammed it in, felt the familiar poof, and stepped back as he disintegrated into dust.
Barely breathing, she looked up at the other man, who’d not moved. He watched her with a twitch of a smile, but he’d not changed. Instead, he adjusted his jacket and looked at her with glinting black eyes.
“Came prepared, did you?” he asked, walking easily from around the other side of the desk. Coming closer, but easy.
Unthreatening and unthreatened.